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W olverines Place Second in Rodeo mmM mum Volume 8 No. 3 OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF UTAH TECHNICAL COLLEGE AT PROVOORFM October 5, 1979 Ten colleges from Utah College Rodeo held on the Instructors Arrested And Suspended In Diesel Mechanics Three instructors in the diesel mechanics department were arrested on campus .Tuesday on second degree theft charges steming from the disappearance of diesel parts and engines at Utah Technical College. The three instructors are Dean William Killpack, 63, 1045 E. Center, Springville, Shirl R. Groneman, 45, 258 N. 100 E. Springville, and Wallace Henrie, 56, 440 N. 200 E. Spanish Fork. They were arraigned at 2 p.m. the same day in the 8th circuit court under Justice Joseph Dimik, to the charge of second degree theft. Under state statute- this involves property having a value of $1,000 or more. According to Assistant Utah County Attorney Gary Anderson, all three men pled not guilty to the charge and were released on their own recognizance. The three men also requested preliminary hearings on the charges. Anderson said his office had been investigating the alleged misconduct for two months, however, he said that Eric Frame, Chief of UTC Police has ,-, been . conducting the ' entire investigation. and Idaho competed in the UTC rodeo grounds Sept. 28 He also noted that the state Attorney General's office had been notified by the college that the investigation was in progress. The three instructors have been suspended from their positions at Utah Technical College, according to Dr. Dee Martin, Education Vice president. Dr. Martin says he does not expect any further suspensions of staff in the Diesel Mechanics Department over the incident. At press time a preliminary hearing had not been scheduled. The County Attorney's office will be prosecuting the case under the direction of Gary Anderson, Mike Esplin and Noel Wooten. "Charming women can true converts make; we love the precepts for the teacher's sake." George Farquhar "To make your children capable. of honest is the beginning of education." John Ruskin If we could but paint with the hand as we see with the eye! Balzac and 29. Rodeo Queen Linda activities. UTC Shows Growth By Naomi Lewis "The school is growing,'' says (--regrstraryT) Grant Cook. Ttfheirrnosf colleges have been struggling to keep their enrollment in the last five years, Utah Technical College has increased its student-body. There are approximately 2,680 day students, 150 more than last year, and approximately 300 more men than women. Evening school has enrolled approximately 1,100 students with twice as many men as women. Mr. Cook said Thursday that this campus has an open entry .concept. A student may add a class New technology helps deaf infants develop One of the most disheartening of disabilities in the young is the loss of hearing. Most children with poor hearing are not discovered until they fail to develop during their early months of learning. The disability, which in majiy cases is easily correctable, may manifest itself in retarded intellectual development, great emotional upset, and anxiety for both parents and child. 1 Thomas reigned over the anytime an instructor will give permission. Beginning Monday, October 1, a change fee of $1 will be charged for each add-drop form. A student may drop or withdraw from a class up until the 1st two weeks of school and receive a W. If a student hasn't officially withdrawn by then, he is in danger of receiving a UW or unofficial withdrawal which is computed on the GPA as a failure. There may be a revision in this policy as the College Council, made up of all the Department Chairmen and the Student Body Prexident are meeting to consider this platform. TheMt. Diablo Hospital in Concord, Calif, has, however, come up with a testing program and some new equipment which may end the period of waiting to see if a hearing loss is present. The program is designed to help parents prepared infants to absorb those early important sounds in their lives, through corrective treatment. Give me that man That is not passion's slave. UTC Rodeo Has Excellent Area Participation Utah Technical College's Orem Arena was the site of the season's opening rodeo, with the Wolverines only taking second place. The reason was a quirk in rules and the choosing of official team members. A member school can enter any number of contestants but its coach must pick six members for its men's team and they are the only ones who can win team points. The CSI coach picked six men who didn't win as many points as his entries-at large did, hence CSI only placed second and Weber State won the meet. At that it was close, with Weber State amassing 456 points to CSI's 437. Utah Technical College at Provo-Orem, host school for the meet, placed third with 215 in the men's division. In the women's division, Utah State at Logan took first with 420, Weber State was second with 160, and Utah Tech at Provo-Orem gals were third with 50. The rodeo was held on the Orem campus at Utah Tech, in the newly-completed rodeo facilities shared by Utah Tech and the Orem Riding Club. Three performances were held, an afternoon and evening on Saturday and an evening performance on Friday. Ten schools from Utah and Idaho entered. An eleventh member of the Rocky Mountain Region admitted this year, Northern Nevada Community College at Elko, did not enter this 1 particular meet. To count toward the team total, entrants had to. be designated members of each school's team, three for women and six for men. But individuals who entered at large and won points will be able to accumulate them in their individual totals for the season. Schedule Oct. 9, 10 Oct. 12 Oct. 11, 13 Oct. 15-19 Results of the men's division were, listed first, second, third and fourth place in this order: Steer wrestling Clary Robinson, Weber State; Mark Parker, CSI; Monty Webb, CSI, and Jay Bob . Lytle, CSI. Bull riding Downey Quails, CSI; Shane Prescott, Weber State; Cal Decore, CSI, and Mark Olsen, Utah Tech at Provo-Orem. Saddle bronc riding Sterling Wines, CSI; Shane Prescott, Weber State; Gordon Edwards, CSI, and Zane Wines, CSI. bareback riding Shane Prescott, Weber; Pete Cornia, Utah State; Mark Olsen, Utah Tech at Provo-Orem and Nick St. Clair, Boise State at Boise. Calf roping Bruce Corkhill, CSI; Jay Bob Lytle, CSI; Gary Stark, Utah State, and Kenny Behling, Utah Tech at Provo-Orem. Team roping Herb Whitworth and Tom Bailey, Idaho State University at Pocatello; Gary Stark and Gene Beck, Utah State; Brad and Tod Russell (brothers), CSI and Clint Walker and Zane Wines, CSI. Winners in the women's division, listed first, second, third and fourth in that order: Barrel racing Lori NcNeil, Utah State; Diane Hooper, Weber State; Suzie Hill, Utah Tech at Provo-Orem and Laurie Lish, CSI. Breakaway roping Melanie Holt, CSI: Tracy Durfee, Utah State; Jill Phillipini, CSI, and Bren-da Durfee, Utah Tech at Provo-Orem. In breakaway roping, the larieat is tied to the horn of the saddle with a ribbon. When the calf is roped and breaks the ribbon, the time is recorded. Goat-tying Lori Miller, Utah State, and Continued on page 7 of Events Foosbatl Demonstration. Women's Volleyball, Dixie at UTC ACU I Convention Deer Hunt Week
Object Description
Rating | |
Title | Tradewinds, 1979-10-05 |
Description | Tradewinds was the name of the student newspaper for Utah Technical College at Provo, between 1971-12-14 and 1984-11-15. |
Date.Original | 1979-10-05 |
Publisher | Utah Valley University |
Subject headings | Utah Technical College at Provo--History; Utah Technical College at Provo/Orem--History; College student newspapers and periodicals; |
Type | Text |
Format | application/pdf |
Source | Tradewinds, 1979-10-05 |
Language | eng |
Rights | Copyright 2013 Utah Valley University |
Item.Year | 1979 |
Item.Month | 10 |
Item.Day | 05 |
Genre | newspaper |
Description
Title | Tradewinds, 1979-10-05 |
Description | Tradewinds was the name of the student newspaper for Utah Technical College at Provo, between 1971-12-14 and 1984-11-15. |
Publisher | Utah Valley University |
Subject headings | Utah Technical College at Provo--History; Utah Technical College at Provo/Orem--History; College student newspapers and periodicals; |
Type | Text |
Format | application/pdf |
Language | eng |
Rights | Copyright 2013 Utah Valley University |
Full text | W olverines Place Second in Rodeo mmM mum Volume 8 No. 3 OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF UTAH TECHNICAL COLLEGE AT PROVOORFM October 5, 1979 Ten colleges from Utah College Rodeo held on the Instructors Arrested And Suspended In Diesel Mechanics Three instructors in the diesel mechanics department were arrested on campus .Tuesday on second degree theft charges steming from the disappearance of diesel parts and engines at Utah Technical College. The three instructors are Dean William Killpack, 63, 1045 E. Center, Springville, Shirl R. Groneman, 45, 258 N. 100 E. Springville, and Wallace Henrie, 56, 440 N. 200 E. Spanish Fork. They were arraigned at 2 p.m. the same day in the 8th circuit court under Justice Joseph Dimik, to the charge of second degree theft. Under state statute- this involves property having a value of $1,000 or more. According to Assistant Utah County Attorney Gary Anderson, all three men pled not guilty to the charge and were released on their own recognizance. The three men also requested preliminary hearings on the charges. Anderson said his office had been investigating the alleged misconduct for two months, however, he said that Eric Frame, Chief of UTC Police has ,-, been . conducting the ' entire investigation. and Idaho competed in the UTC rodeo grounds Sept. 28 He also noted that the state Attorney General's office had been notified by the college that the investigation was in progress. The three instructors have been suspended from their positions at Utah Technical College, according to Dr. Dee Martin, Education Vice president. Dr. Martin says he does not expect any further suspensions of staff in the Diesel Mechanics Department over the incident. At press time a preliminary hearing had not been scheduled. The County Attorney's office will be prosecuting the case under the direction of Gary Anderson, Mike Esplin and Noel Wooten. "Charming women can true converts make; we love the precepts for the teacher's sake." George Farquhar "To make your children capable. of honest is the beginning of education." John Ruskin If we could but paint with the hand as we see with the eye! Balzac and 29. Rodeo Queen Linda activities. UTC Shows Growth By Naomi Lewis "The school is growing,'' says (--regrstraryT) Grant Cook. Ttfheirrnosf colleges have been struggling to keep their enrollment in the last five years, Utah Technical College has increased its student-body. There are approximately 2,680 day students, 150 more than last year, and approximately 300 more men than women. Evening school has enrolled approximately 1,100 students with twice as many men as women. Mr. Cook said Thursday that this campus has an open entry .concept. A student may add a class New technology helps deaf infants develop One of the most disheartening of disabilities in the young is the loss of hearing. Most children with poor hearing are not discovered until they fail to develop during their early months of learning. The disability, which in majiy cases is easily correctable, may manifest itself in retarded intellectual development, great emotional upset, and anxiety for both parents and child. 1 Thomas reigned over the anytime an instructor will give permission. Beginning Monday, October 1, a change fee of $1 will be charged for each add-drop form. A student may drop or withdraw from a class up until the 1st two weeks of school and receive a W. If a student hasn't officially withdrawn by then, he is in danger of receiving a UW or unofficial withdrawal which is computed on the GPA as a failure. There may be a revision in this policy as the College Council, made up of all the Department Chairmen and the Student Body Prexident are meeting to consider this platform. TheMt. Diablo Hospital in Concord, Calif, has, however, come up with a testing program and some new equipment which may end the period of waiting to see if a hearing loss is present. The program is designed to help parents prepared infants to absorb those early important sounds in their lives, through corrective treatment. Give me that man That is not passion's slave. UTC Rodeo Has Excellent Area Participation Utah Technical College's Orem Arena was the site of the season's opening rodeo, with the Wolverines only taking second place. The reason was a quirk in rules and the choosing of official team members. A member school can enter any number of contestants but its coach must pick six members for its men's team and they are the only ones who can win team points. The CSI coach picked six men who didn't win as many points as his entries-at large did, hence CSI only placed second and Weber State won the meet. At that it was close, with Weber State amassing 456 points to CSI's 437. Utah Technical College at Provo-Orem, host school for the meet, placed third with 215 in the men's division. In the women's division, Utah State at Logan took first with 420, Weber State was second with 160, and Utah Tech at Provo-Orem gals were third with 50. The rodeo was held on the Orem campus at Utah Tech, in the newly-completed rodeo facilities shared by Utah Tech and the Orem Riding Club. Three performances were held, an afternoon and evening on Saturday and an evening performance on Friday. Ten schools from Utah and Idaho entered. An eleventh member of the Rocky Mountain Region admitted this year, Northern Nevada Community College at Elko, did not enter this 1 particular meet. To count toward the team total, entrants had to. be designated members of each school's team, three for women and six for men. But individuals who entered at large and won points will be able to accumulate them in their individual totals for the season. Schedule Oct. 9, 10 Oct. 12 Oct. 11, 13 Oct. 15-19 Results of the men's division were, listed first, second, third and fourth place in this order: Steer wrestling Clary Robinson, Weber State; Mark Parker, CSI; Monty Webb, CSI, and Jay Bob . Lytle, CSI. Bull riding Downey Quails, CSI; Shane Prescott, Weber State; Cal Decore, CSI, and Mark Olsen, Utah Tech at Provo-Orem. Saddle bronc riding Sterling Wines, CSI; Shane Prescott, Weber State; Gordon Edwards, CSI, and Zane Wines, CSI. bareback riding Shane Prescott, Weber; Pete Cornia, Utah State; Mark Olsen, Utah Tech at Provo-Orem and Nick St. Clair, Boise State at Boise. Calf roping Bruce Corkhill, CSI; Jay Bob Lytle, CSI; Gary Stark, Utah State, and Kenny Behling, Utah Tech at Provo-Orem. Team roping Herb Whitworth and Tom Bailey, Idaho State University at Pocatello; Gary Stark and Gene Beck, Utah State; Brad and Tod Russell (brothers), CSI and Clint Walker and Zane Wines, CSI. Winners in the women's division, listed first, second, third and fourth in that order: Barrel racing Lori NcNeil, Utah State; Diane Hooper, Weber State; Suzie Hill, Utah Tech at Provo-Orem and Laurie Lish, CSI. Breakaway roping Melanie Holt, CSI: Tracy Durfee, Utah State; Jill Phillipini, CSI, and Bren-da Durfee, Utah Tech at Provo-Orem. In breakaway roping, the larieat is tied to the horn of the saddle with a ribbon. When the calf is roped and breaks the ribbon, the time is recorded. Goat-tying Lori Miller, Utah State, and Continued on page 7 of Events Foosbatl Demonstration. Women's Volleyball, Dixie at UTC ACU I Convention Deer Hunt Week |
Item.Page | 1 |
Genre | newspaper |
Page type | page |
Extent | 1881874 |
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